posted on 2010-01-01, 00:00authored bySenaka Buthpitiya, Deepthi Madamanchi, Sumalatha Kommaraju, Martin L Griss
A previous study shows that busy professionals receive in excess of
50 emails per day of which approximately 23% require immediate attention,
13% require attention later and 64% are unimportant and typically ignored. The
flood of emails impact mobile users even more heavily. Flooded inboxes cause
busy professionals to spend considerable amounts of time searching for
important messages, and there has been much research into automating the
process using email content for classification; but we find email priority
depends also on user context.
In this paper we describe the Personal Messaging Assistant (PMA), an
advanced rule-based email management system which considers user context
and email content. Context information is gathered from various sources
including mobile phones, indoor and outdoor locationing systems, and
calendars. PMA uses separate scales of importance and urgency to prioritize
emails and to decide on an appropriate action, such as SMS to user, defer to
later, file or forward. Initial results yield 96% recall and 88% precision in
importance classification of emails; 95% recall and 92% precision in urgency
classification of emails. PMA shows a 30X reduction in false-negative rates
over existing systems. A key contribution of our work has been to leverage an
extensible set of context information, gathered in a mobile environment, for the
classification of emails and customizable decision making.